Manage absence and sickness
Employee absence as a capability issue
An employee may become incapable of doing their job to the required standard because they are genuinely affected by either of the following:
- long-term ill health related to an underlying medical condition and therefore they don't attend work for a long period of time
- frequent bouts of short-term sickness related to an underlying medical condition and they are therefore unable to attend work regularly
Addressing absence as a capability issue
In either of these circumstances, you should treat any absence as a capability issue and:
- deal with the situation sensitively
- investigate, measure, and monitor the employee's absence record
- consult them regularly to find out about their health and discuss ways of enabling them to remain in the workplace, or if on long-term sickness absence the likelihood of a return to work
- set time limits on assessing the situation and tell the employee
- let them know if their job is at risk, and why
- obtain medical reports - although you'll need their permission
- consider adjustments to their job to allow them to return to work and/or do their job more easily
- consider offering any other vacancy you may have which has duties that the employee may be fit to perform
To avoid an unfair dismissal claim, only dismiss as a last resort. Make sure you have followed fair and proper procedures, including statutory dismissal and disciplinary procedures. See dismissing employees.
Keep in mind the following:
- Check if the illness relates to a disability - if so, you may need to make reasonable adjustments so that the employee can carry out their job. For the definition of disability, see how to prevent discrimination and value diversity.
- Discount any periods of absence related to a pregnancy-related illness when taking action over someone's absence record. For the rights of pregnant employees, see pregnancy at work.
- An eligible employee may be entitled to statutory sick pay for up to 28 weeks - as well as any contractual sick pay. See pay: employer obligations.
Absence related to drugs and alcohol
Treat employees addicted to drugs or alcohol similarly to employees with any other serious illness. However, if an employee won't accept they have a problem or seek help, the issue may become one of unacceptable conduct.
Where the issue is purely one of conduct, ie the employee is not addicted to alcohol or drugs but their drug/alcohol consumption is leading to regular absence/lateness, you should consider subjecting them to your disciplinary procedure.
See workplace policies on smoking, drugs, and alcohol, and employee absence as a conduct issue.
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LRA Workplace Information Service03300 555 300